Harrison recorded the instrumental track for "The Inner Light" in Bombay in January 1968, during the sessions for his Wonderwall Music soundtrack album. It is the only Beatles studio recording to be made outside Europe and introduced Indian instruments such as sarod, shehnai and pakhavaj to the band's sound. The musicians on the track include Aashish Khan, Hanuman Jadev and Hariprasad Chaurasia. Aside from Harrison's lead vocal, recorded in London, the Beatles' only contribution came in the form of group backing vocals over the song's final line. In the decade following its release, the song became a comparative rarity among the band's recordings; it has subsequently appeared on compilation albums such as Rarities, Past Masters, Volume Two and Mono Masters.

Harrison wrote the song during a period when he had undertaken his first musical project outside the Beatles, composing the soundtrack to the Joe Massot-directed film Wonderwall,[12][13] and continued to study the Indian sitar, partly under the tutelage of Ravi Shankar.[14][15] When writing "The Inner Light", he made minimal alterations to the translated Lao-Tzu text[2][16] and used the same title that Mascaró had used.[8] In I, Me, Mine, Harrison says of the changes required to create his second verse:

In the original poem, the verse says "Without going out of my door, I can know the ways of heaven." And so to prevent any misinterpretations – and also to make the song a bit longer – I did repeat that as a second verse but made it: "Without going out of your door / You can know all things on earth / Without looking out of your window / You can know the ways of heaven" – so that it included everybody.[1]

After "Within You Without You", "The Inner Light" was the second composition to fully reflect Harrison's immersion in Eastern spiritual concepts, particularly meditation,[17][18] an interest that had spread to his Beatles bandmates[19][20] and to the group's audience and peers.[21][22] The lyrics espouse meditation as a means to genuine understanding.[23] Theologian Dale Allison describes the song as a "hymn" to quietism and comments that, in their attempt to "relativize and disparage knowledge of the external world", the words convey Harrison's enduring worldview.[24] Author John Winn notes that Harrison had pre-empted the message of "The Inner Light" in an August 1967 interview, when he told New York DJ Murray Kaufman: "The more you learn, the more you know that you don't know anything at all."[25] Writing in his study of Harrison's musical career, Ian Inglis similarly identifies a precedent in the song "It's All Too Much", where Harrison sings: "The more I learn, the less I know."[26]

"The Inner Light" was Harrison's third song in the Indian musical genre,[27] after "Love You To" and "Within You Without You".[28] While those earlier songs had followed the Hindustani (North Indian) system of Indian classical music, as sitar- and tabla-based compositions, "The Inner Light" is closer in style to the Carnatic (or South Indian) temple music tradition.[29] Harrison's progression within the genre reflected his concept for the Wonderwall soundtrack[30] – namely, that the assignment allowed him to create an "anthology" of Indian music[31][32] and present a diverse range of styles and instrumentation.[10][33]

The composition is structured into three instrumental passages separated by two sections of verse.[34] The buoyant mood of the instrumental sections – set to what author Peter Lavezzoli describes as "a raucous 4/4 rhythm"[11] – contrasts with the gentle, meditative portions containing the verses.[27][35] The contrast is reflected in the lead instruments that Harrison would use on the recording: whereas sarod and shehnai, supported by pakhavaj, are prominent during the musical passages, the softer-sounding bansuri (bamboo flute)[35] and harmonium accompany the singing over the verses, as the sarod provides a response to each line of the vocal.[36] In the last instrumental section, Harrison incorporates the conclusion of Lao-Tzu's poem,[29] beginning with the line "Arrive without travelling".[37]

The melody conforms to the pitches of Mixolydian mode, or its Indian equivalent, the Khamajthaat.[38]Musicologist Dominic Pedler writes that the tune features unusual tritone intervals, which, together with the musical arrangement, ensure that the song is far removed from standard "pop tunes".[39] In a further departure from Harrison's previous forays into Indian music, both of which made extensive use of single-chord drone, the melody allows for formal chord changes: over the verses, the dominant E♭ major alternates with F minor, before a move to A♭ over the line "The farther one travels the less one knows".[40]

In the opening words ("Without going out"), the melody uses what Pedler terms a "hauntingly modal" G-B♭-D♭ tritone progression as, within the song's tonic key (of E♭), the 3rd note heads towards the flat 7th.[39] Musicologist Walter Everett likens this ascending arpeggiation of the diminished triad to a melodic feature in "Within You Without You" (over that song's recurring phrase "We were talking").[41] "The Inner Light" is an example of Harrison creating ambiguity about the tonic key, a technique that Pedler recognises as a characteristic of Harrison's spiritually oriented songwriting.[39]

Having used London-based Indian musicians from the Asian Music Circle on "Love You To" and "Within You Without You",[42] Harrison recorded "The Inner Light" in India with some of the country's foremost contemporary classical players.[43] In early January 1968, he travelled to HMV Studios[10][44] in Bombay to record part of the score for Wonderwall,[5][45] much of which would appear on his debut solo album, Wonderwall Music.[46] The day after completing the soundtrack recordings, on 13 January,[47] Harrison taped additional pieces for possible later use, one of which was the instrumental track for "The Inner Light".[48] Five takes of the song were recorded on a two-track recorder.[49]

The musicians at the sessions were recruited by Shambhu Das, who had assisted in Harrison's sitar tuition on his previous visit to Bombay, in 1966,[50] and Vijay Dubey, the head of A&R for HMV Records in India.[51] The line-up on the track was Aashish Khan (sarod), Mahapurush Misra (pakhavaj), Hanuman Jadev (shehnai), Hariprasad Chaurasia (bansuri) and Rijram Desad (harmonium).[11][52] In Lavezzoli's estimation, although these instruments are more commonly associated with the Hindustani discipline, the performers play them in a South Indian style, which adds to the Carnatic identity of the song.[11][nb 2] The recording features tabla tarang[41] over the quiet, vocal interludes.[53] Author Simon Leng refutes the presence of the oboe-like shehnai, however, saying that this part was played on an esraj, a bow-played string instrument.[53][nb 3] As with the Wonderwall selections recorded at HMV, Harrison directed the musicians[52][57] but did not perform on the instrumental track.[11]

Harrison completed the song in London during sessions for a new Beatles single,[58] which was intended to cover their absence while the group were in Rishikesh, India, with the Maharishi.[59][60] Once the Bombay recording had been transferred to four-track tape,[61] Harrison recorded his vocal part for "The Inner Light" on 6 February, at EMI Studios (now Abbey Road Studios).[62][63] Lacking confidence in his ability to sing in so high a register, he had to be coaxed by Lennon and Paul McCartney into delivering the requisite performance.[29] Two days later, McCartney and Lennon overdubbed backing vocals at the very end of the song,[64] over the words "Do all without doing".[61]

"The Inner Light" was held in high regard by Harrison's bandmates,[5] particularly McCartney,[39] and was selected as the B-side for the forthcoming single.[65] It was the first Harrison composition to appear on a Beatles single,[66][67] in addition to being the only Beatles studio recording made outside Europe.[29] Everett writes that Lennon's admiration for the track was evident from his subsequent creation of the song "Julia" through "a very parallel process" – in that instance, by adapting a work by Kahlil Gibran.[41][nb 4] Although Harrison had served as the producer at the Bombay session, only George Martin received a production credit for "The Inner Light".[71]

Forget the Indian music and listen to the melody. Don't you think it's a beautiful melody? It's really lovely.[66]

– Paul McCartney, 1968

The song was issued as the B-side of "Lady Madonna" on 15 March 1968 in the UK,[72] with the US release following three days later.[73] While Chris Welch of Melody Maker expressed doubts about the hit potential of the A-side,[74][75]Billboard magazine's reviewer commented on the aptness of "The Inner Light", given the band's concurrent "meditation spell".[76] In America, the B-side charted independently on the Billboard Hot 100 for one week,[77] placing at number 96.[78][79] In Australia, it was listed with "Lady Madonna", as a double A-side, when the single topped the Go-Set national singles chart.[80]

In the description of author and critic David Quantick, whereas "Lady Madonna" represented a departure from the Beatles' psychedelic productions of the previous year, "The Inner Light" was an "accurate indication" of the group's mindset in Rishikesh.[81]Paul Saltzman, a Canadian film-maker who had been inspired by the Beatles' adoption of Indian musical and philosophical themes,[35] joined the band at the Maharishi's ashram and recalls hearing the song there for the first time.[82] He said he found Harrison's perspective on meditation profoundly moving,[83] particularly when Harrison told him that, while the Beatles had achieved wealth and fame in abundance, "It isn't love. It isn't health. It isn't peace inside, is it?"[84][85]

The Beatles' 1968 visit to Rishikesh resulted in a surge of interest in Indian culture and spirituality among Western youth,[86][87] but it also marked the end of the band's overtly Indian phase.[88][89] From June that year, Harrison abandoned his efforts to master the sitar and returned to the guitar as his principal instrument.[90][91][nb 5] In an interview in September, Harrison discussed his renewed interest in rock music and described "The Inner Light" as "one of my precious things".[95]

Author Nicholas Schaffner wrote in 1977 that "The Inner Light" "proved to be the best – and last" example of Harrison directly incorporating Indian music into the Beatles' work.[66] Schaffner paired it with "Within You Without You" as raga rock songs that "feature haunting, exquisitely lovely melodies", and as two pieces that could have been among Harrison's "greatest achievements" had they been made with his bandmates' participation.[96] Bruce Eder of AllMusic describes the same tracks as "a pair of beautiful songs … that were effectively solo recordings".[97]Ian MacDonald likens the song's "studied innocence and exotic sweetness" to recordings by the Incredible String Band and concludes: "'The Inner Light' is both spirited and charming – one of its author's most attractive pieces."[5]

Writing for Mojo magazine in 2003, John Harris similarly admired it as Harrison's "loveliest addition of Indian music to The Beatles' repertoire".[98] In Ian Inglis' view: "it is the extraordinary synthesis of separate musical and lyrical traditions (in this case, Indian instrumentation, Chinese philosophy, and Western popular music) that distinguishes the song. Harrison's uncharacteristically warm vocal weaves in and around the delicate, almost fragile, melody to deliver a simple testimony to the power of meditation ..."[99] With regard to the song's influence, Inglis recognises Harrison's espousal of Eastern spirituality as "a serious and important development that reflected popular music's increasing maturity", and a statement that prepared rock audiences for later religious pronouncements by Pete Townshend, Carlos Santana, John McLaughlin, Cat Stevens and Bob Dylan.[100]

Nick DeRiso of the music website Something Else! considers "The Inner Light" to be one of its composer's "most successful marriages of raga and rock" and, through Harrison's introduction of instruments such as sarod, shehnai and pakhavaj, a key recording in the evolution of the 1980s world music genre.[101] While admiring the song's transcendent qualities, Everett quotes the ethnomusicologist David Reck, who wrote in 1988: "Most memorable is the sheer simplicity and straightforwardness of the haunting modal melody, somehow capturing perfectly the mood and truth and aphoristic essence of the lyrics."[41]

A stereo mix of "The Inner Light" was created at Abbey Road on 27 January 1970[102] for what Beatles recording historian Mark Lewisohn terms "some indefinable future use".[103][nb 6] On this later mix, the opening instrumental section differs slightly from that on the original, mono version.[65]

Following its initial release in 1968, "The Inner Light" became one of the rarest Beatles recordings.[27] Although it appeared on Por Siempre Beatles, a 1971 Spanish compilation album,[105] the song was not available on a British or American album until its inclusion on Rarities,[106][107] which was originally issued as a disc in the 1978 box set The Beatles Collection before receiving an independent UK release.[108] The 1980 US compilation titled Rarities also featured "The Inner Light",[109] again in its mono form.[110] The stereo mix was first released as the opening track on a bonus EP, titled The Beatles,[111] issued in the UK in December 1981 as part of The Beatles EP Collection.[103] The song was issued on CD in 1988, in stereo, on Past Masters, Volume Two.[112] The mono mix was subsequently included on the Beatles' Mono Masters compilation.[113]

In 2014, an alternative instrumental take of the song was issued as a bonus track on Harrison's Wonderwall Music remastered CD.[118][119] The recording begins with a short studio discussion,[101] as Harrison instructs the Bombay musicians.[120][nb 7]

The song appeared partway through the concert's opening, Indian music segment,[131] which was performed by Shankar and otherwise composed by her father, Ravi Shankar,[128][130] who had continued to be Harrison's friend and mentor until his death.[132] Inglis comments that, in its context at the Concert for George, "['The Inner Light'] does not appear at all out of place among the Indian folk and classical compositions that surround it."[133] Reviewing the Concert for George film for The Guardian, James Griffiths admired Lynne's reading of the song as a "particularly sublime version".[134]

In an email to the Star Trek blog site Soul of Star Trek, Nick Sagan, another of the show's screenwriters, suggested that the song's lyrics express the "ability to experience many things without actually going anywhere – and that's what happens to Picard". In his subsequent post on the same site, Gendel confirmed this similarity, saying that the Beatles track "captured the theme of the show: that Picard experienced a lifetime of memories all in his head".[139] When discussing the episode on the official Star Trek website in 2013, Gendel concluded: "If you Google 'Inner Light + song' you’ll get the Beatles tune and an acknowledgment of my TNG homage to it back-to-back … that might be the best gift my authorship of this episode has given me."[140]

^The poem to which Mascaró referred, however, corresponds to what many other English translations of the Tao Te Ching number as chapter 47.[11]

^Lavezzoli highlights the manner in which the sarod, traditionally a lead instrument in North India, is played by Khan: staccato-style in the upper register, creating a sound more typical of acoustic guitar. Similarly, the pakhavaj is performed in the style of a South Indian tavil barrel drum, and the sound of the double-reed shehnai is closer to that of its Southern equivalent, the nagaswaram.[11]

^Citing Khan's recollection that he only worked with Harrison in London, Leng also says that the sarod was added to the track later.[53] Rather than the esraj that Leng gives for "The Inner Light" and for Wonderwall tracks such as "Crying",[54] Harrison used the bow-played tar shehnai during the Bombay sessions,[33][55] played by Vinayak Vora.[49][56]

^While filming Raga together in June 1968, Shankar urged Harrison not to ignore his musical roots.[92] This advice, together with Harrison's realisation that he would never match the standard of Shankar's top students, who had dedicated themselves to learning the sitar from a young age, led to his decision to re-engage with the guitar.[93][94]

^According to Everett, the song was most likely under consideration for the 1970 US compilation album Hey Jude.[104]

^The reissue also includes the previously unreleased "Almost Shankara", another piece that Harrison recorded in Bombay in 1968.[121]

^While noting the plethora of such publications, particularly in America, Schaffner describes The Inner Light as "excellent" and singles it out for the thoroughness of its discographical information.[126]

Morelli, Sarah (2016). "'A Superior Race of Strong Women': North Indian Classical Dance in the San Francisco Bay Area". In Lornell, Kip; Rasmussen, Anne K. (eds). The Music of Multicultural America: Performance, Identity, and Community in the United States. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN978-1-4968-0374-0.CS1 maint: Extra text: editors list (link)